Here are the answers to the handout on understanding arguments that was assigned as optional extra credit.
1. (P1) Fairdale has the best team.
(C) Fairdale will win the championship
2. (P1) The housing market is depressed.
(P2) Interest rates are low.
(C) It's a good time to buy a home.
3. (P1) China is guilty of extreme human rights abuses.
(P2) China refuses to implement democratic reforms.
(C) The U.S. should refuse to deal with the present Chinese government.
4. (P1) The results of the Persian Gulf War were obviously successful for the U.S. military.
(C) The U. S. military is both capable and competent.
5. (P1) Scientific discoveries are continually debunking religious myths.
(P2) Science provides the only hope for solving the many problems faced by humankind.
(C) Science provides a more accurate view of human life than does religion.
6. (P1) Freedom of speech and expressions are essential to a democratic form of government.
(P2) As soon as we allow some censorship, it won't be long before censorship will be used to silence the opinions critical of the government.
(P3) Once we allow some censorship, we will have no more freedom than the Germans did under Hitler.
(C) We must resist all effort to allow the government to censor entertainment.
7. (P1) I'm very good at my job.
(C) I deserve a raise.
8. (P1) Jesse is one year old.
(P2) Most one-year-olds can walk.
(C) Jesse can walk.
9. (P1) The revocation of the 55 mph speed limit has resulted in an increased number of auto fatalities.
(C) we must alleviate this problem with stricter speed limit enforcement.
10. (P1) The last person we hired from Bayview Tech turned out to be a bad employee.
(C) I'm not willing to hire anybody else from that school again.
11. (P1) Maebe didn't show up for work today.
(P2) Maebe has never missed work unless she was sick.
(C) Maebe is probably sick today.
12. (P1) The United States, as the most powerful nation in the world, has a moral obligation to give assistance to people who are subjected to inhumane treatment.
(P2) The ethnic Albanians were being persecuted in Kosovo.
(C) It was proper for the U.S. to become involved in the air campaign against Kosovo.
----------------
Hat tip: I took some of the examples (with some revisions) from Beth Rosdatter's website , and some (with some revisions) from Jon Young's website .
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Subjective To You, But Not To Me...
Here are some links on our first topic: are moral claims merely opinions or are they factually based?
- BASIC: a conversation between cartoon dinosaurs on moral relativism (the theory similar to moral subjectivism)
- INTERMEDIATE: a clarification of what moral relativism & subjectivism are and are not
- ADVANCED: a detailed overview of various versions of moral relativism from my favorite free online philosophy encyclopedia (yes, there is more than one free online philosophy encyclopedia)
- An interview with a moral psychologist who supports a sophisticated version of moral subjectivism
- An argument against a key premise supporting moral subjectivism: cultures morally agree more than they disagree
- A video lecture titled "Is Morality Real or Do We Make it Up?"
Monday, February 16, 2009
Structure
One of the trickier concepts to understand in this course is the structure of an argument. This is a more detailed explanation of the term. If you've been struggling to understand this term, the following might help you.
An argument's structure is its underlying logic; the way the premises and conclusion logically relate to one another. The structure of an argument is entirely separate from the actual meaning of the premises. For instance, the following three arguments, even though they're talking about different things, have the exact same structure:
1) All tigers have stripes.
Tony is a tiger.
Tony has stripes.
2) All humans have wings.
Sean is a human.
Sean has wings.
3) All blurgles have glorps.
Xerxon is a blurgle.
Xerxon has glorps.
There are, of course, other, non-structural differences in these three arguments. For instance, the tiger argument is overall good, since it has a good structure AND true premises. The human/wings argument is overall bad, since it has a false premise. And the blurgles argument is just crazy, since it uses made up words. Still, all three arguments have the same underlying structure (a good structure):
All A's have B's.
x is an A.
x has B's.
Evaluating the structure of an argument is tricky. Here's the main idea regarding what counts as a good structure: the premises, if they were true, would provide good evidence for us to believe that the conclusion is true. So, if you believed the premises, they would convince you that the conclusion is worth believing, too.
Note I did NOT say that the premises are actually true in a good-structured argument. Structure is only about truth-preservation, not about whether the premises are actually true or false. What's "truth preservation" mean? Well, truth-preserving arguments are those whose structures guarantee that if you stick in true premises, you get a true conclusion.
The premises you've actually stuck into this particular structure could be good (true) or bad (false). That's what makes evaluating an arg's structure so weird. To check the structure, you have to ignore what you actually know about the premises being true or false.
Good Structured Args
If we assume that all the premises are true, then the conclusion must also be true for an argument to have a good structure. Notice we are only assuming truth, not guaranteeing it. Again, this makes sense, because we’re truth-preservers: if the premises are true, the conclusion that follows must be true.
EXAMPLES:
1) All humans are mammals.
All mammals have hair.
All humans have hair.
2) If it snows, then it’s below 32 degrees.
It is snowing right now.
It’s below 32 degrees right now.
3) All humans are mammals.
All mammals have wings.
All humans have wings.
4) Either Yao is tall or Spud is tall.
Yao is not tall.
Therefore, Spud is tall.
Even though arguments 3 and 4 are ultimately bad, they still have good structure (their underlying form is good). The second premise of argument 3 is false—not all mammals have wings—but it has the same exact structure of argument 1—a good structure. Same with argument 4: the second premise is false (Yao Ming is about 7 feet tall), but the structure is good (it’s either this or that; it’s not this; therefore, it’s that).
To evaluate the structure, then, assume that all the premises are true. Imagine a world in which all the premises are true. In that world, MUST the conclusion also be true? Or can you imagine a scenario in that world in which the premises are true, but the conclusion is still false? If you can imagine this situation, then the argument's structure is bad. If you cannot, then the argument is truth-preserving (inputting truths guarantees a true output), and thus the structure is good.
Bad Structured Arguments
In an argument with a bad structure, you can’t draw the conclusion from the premises – they don’t naturally follow. Bad structured arguments do not preserve truth.
EXAMPLES:
1) All humans are mammals.
All whales are mammals.
All humans are whales.
2) If it snows, then it’s below 32 degrees.
It doesn’t snow.
It’s not below 32 degrees.
3) All humans are mammals.
All students in our class are mammals.
All students in our class are humans.
4) Either Yao is tall or Spud is short.
Yao is tall.
Spud is short.
Even though arguments 3 and 4 have all true premises and a true conclusion, they are still have a bad structure, because their form is bad. Argument 3 has the same exact structure as argument 1—a bad structure (it doesn’t preserve truth).
Even though in the real world the premises and conclusion of argument 3 are true, we can imagine a world in which all the premises of argument 3 are true, yet the conclusion is false. For instance, imagine that our school starts letting whales take classes. The second premise would still be true, but the conclusion would then be false.
The same goes for argument 4: even though Spud is short (Spud Webb is around 5 feet tall), this argument doesn’t guarantee this. The structure is bad (it’s either this or that; it’s this; therefore, it’s that, too.). We can imagine a world in which Yao is tall, the first premise is true, and yet Spud is tall, too.
An argument's structure is its underlying logic; the way the premises and conclusion logically relate to one another. The structure of an argument is entirely separate from the actual meaning of the premises. For instance, the following three arguments, even though they're talking about different things, have the exact same structure:
1) All tigers have stripes.
Tony is a tiger.
Tony has stripes.
2) All humans have wings.
Sean is a human.
Sean has wings.
3) All blurgles have glorps.
Xerxon is a blurgle.
Xerxon has glorps.
There are, of course, other, non-structural differences in these three arguments. For instance, the tiger argument is overall good, since it has a good structure AND true premises. The human/wings argument is overall bad, since it has a false premise. And the blurgles argument is just crazy, since it uses made up words. Still, all three arguments have the same underlying structure (a good structure):
All A's have B's.
x is an A.
x has B's.
Evaluating the structure of an argument is tricky. Here's the main idea regarding what counts as a good structure: the premises, if they were true, would provide good evidence for us to believe that the conclusion is true. So, if you believed the premises, they would convince you that the conclusion is worth believing, too.
Note I did NOT say that the premises are actually true in a good-structured argument. Structure is only about truth-preservation, not about whether the premises are actually true or false. What's "truth preservation" mean? Well, truth-preserving arguments are those whose structures guarantee that if you stick in true premises, you get a true conclusion.
The premises you've actually stuck into this particular structure could be good (true) or bad (false). That's what makes evaluating an arg's structure so weird. To check the structure, you have to ignore what you actually know about the premises being true or false.
Good Structured Args
If we assume that all the premises are true, then the conclusion must also be true for an argument to have a good structure. Notice we are only assuming truth, not guaranteeing it. Again, this makes sense, because we’re truth-preservers: if the premises are true, the conclusion that follows must be true.
EXAMPLES:
1) All humans are mammals.
All mammals have hair.
All humans have hair.
2) If it snows, then it’s below 32 degrees.
It is snowing right now.
It’s below 32 degrees right now.
3) All humans are mammals.
All mammals have wings.
All humans have wings.
4) Either Yao is tall or Spud is tall.
Yao is not tall.
Therefore, Spud is tall.
Even though arguments 3 and 4 are ultimately bad, they still have good structure (their underlying form is good). The second premise of argument 3 is false—not all mammals have wings—but it has the same exact structure of argument 1—a good structure. Same with argument 4: the second premise is false (Yao Ming is about 7 feet tall), but the structure is good (it’s either this or that; it’s not this; therefore, it’s that).
To evaluate the structure, then, assume that all the premises are true. Imagine a world in which all the premises are true. In that world, MUST the conclusion also be true? Or can you imagine a scenario in that world in which the premises are true, but the conclusion is still false? If you can imagine this situation, then the argument's structure is bad. If you cannot, then the argument is truth-preserving (inputting truths guarantees a true output), and thus the structure is good.
Bad Structured Arguments
In an argument with a bad structure, you can’t draw the conclusion from the premises – they don’t naturally follow. Bad structured arguments do not preserve truth.
EXAMPLES:
1) All humans are mammals.
All whales are mammals.
All humans are whales.
2) If it snows, then it’s below 32 degrees.
It doesn’t snow.
It’s not below 32 degrees.
3) All humans are mammals.
All students in our class are mammals.
All students in our class are humans.
4) Either Yao is tall or Spud is short.
Yao is tall.
Spud is short.
Even though arguments 3 and 4 have all true premises and a true conclusion, they are still have a bad structure, because their form is bad. Argument 3 has the same exact structure as argument 1—a bad structure (it doesn’t preserve truth).
Even though in the real world the premises and conclusion of argument 3 are true, we can imagine a world in which all the premises of argument 3 are true, yet the conclusion is false. For instance, imagine that our school starts letting whales take classes. The second premise would still be true, but the conclusion would then be false.
The same goes for argument 4: even though Spud is short (Spud Webb is around 5 feet tall), this argument doesn’t guarantee this. The structure is bad (it’s either this or that; it’s this; therefore, it’s that, too.). We can imagine a world in which Yao is tall, the first premise is true, and yet Spud is tall, too.
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Paper #1 Guidelines
Due Date: The beginning of class on Tuesday, March 10th, 2009
Worth: 100 points (10% of your final grade)
Assignment: Write an argumentative essay on the topic below. Papers must be typed, and must be between 600-1200 words long. Provide a word count on the first page of the paper. (Most programs like Microsoft Word & WordPerfect have automatic word counts.)
Topic: Explain and defend your conception of personhood as it relates to morality.
Worth: 100 points (10% of your final grade)
Assignment: Write an argumentative essay on the topic below. Papers must be typed, and must be between 600-1200 words long. Provide a word count on the first page of the paper. (Most programs like Microsoft Word & WordPerfect have automatic word counts.)
Topic: Explain and defend your conception of personhood as it relates to morality.
(1) First, briefly explain and critically evaluate the different conceptions of personhood that we have discussed in class. Be sure to explain each conception offered by Mary Anne Warren, Don Marquis, James Rachels (his account of a biographical life discussed in the handout), Peter Singer, and Michael Allen Fox.When considering your conception of personhood, be sure to answer the following questions: Which living creatures are persons, and which living creatures are not persons? Do you believe that you need to be a “person” in the moral sense in order to have moral rights (in particular, the right to life and the right to not suffer unnecessarily)? Can someone have moral rights before they have moral duties? Be sure to fully explain and philosophically defend each of your answers.
(2) Second, explain how each of these authors uses their conception to attempt to settle the particular ethical debate he or she wrote about. (Warren on abortion, Marquis on abortion, Rachels on euthanasia, Singer on animal ethics, and Fox on animal ethics).
(3) Third, explain your conception of personhood: do you agree with one of these authors’ conceptions, or do you have one of your own?
(4) Fourth, explain the solution that your conception of personhood gives to the ethical debates of abortion, euthanasia, and animal ethics.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Quiz You Once, Shame on Me
As we decided in class, the quiz will be held at the beginning of class on Tuesday, February 24th. You will have about 25 minutes to take it. The quiz is worth 10% of your overall grade.
There will be two sections: the first section is on evaluating arguments, and will look just like the group work on evaluating arguments we did in class last week. There will also be a section of 4 short answer questions on the topic of moral subjectivism and realism (Are moral claims merely opinions or are they factually based?) These questions will be based on our class discussions of the Elliott Sober and Thomas Nagel readings.
Feel free to insult me in the comments for putting you through the terrible ordeal of taking a quiz.
There will be two sections: the first section is on evaluating arguments, and will look just like the group work on evaluating arguments we did in class last week. There will also be a section of 4 short answer questions on the topic of moral subjectivism and realism (Are moral claims merely opinions or are they factually based?) These questions will be based on our class discussions of the Elliott Sober and Thomas Nagel readings.
Feel free to insult me in the comments for putting you through the terrible ordeal of taking a quiz.
Labels:
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Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Evaluating Args
Here are the answers to the handout on evaluating arguments that we went over in class. Feel free to call, text, email, or comment if you have a question about any of this.
1) All kangaroos are marsupials.
All marsupials are mammals.
All kangaroos are mammals.
Bush was either a great prez or the greatest prez.
Bush wasn’t a great prez.
Bush was the greatest prez.
Sean is a person.
Sean is funny.
Some email forwards are false.
Some annoying things are false.
All bats have wings.
All mammals have wings.
All bearded people are mean.
Some dads are mean.
All boring things are taught by Sean
This class is taught by Sean.
All humans are mammals.
All students in here are humans.
(More on Sisyphus)
1) All kangaroos are marsupials.
All marsupials are mammals.
All kangaroos are mammals.
P1- true2) (from Stephen Colbert)
P2- true
structure- good
overall - good
Bush was either a great prez or the greatest prez.
Bush wasn’t a great prez.
Bush was the greatest prez.
P1- questionable ("great" is subjective)3) Some people are funny.
P2- questionable ("great" is subjective)
structure- good (it's either A or B; it's not A; so it's B)
overall- bad (bad premises)
Sean is a person.
Sean is funny.
P1- true (we might disagree over who specifically is funny, but nearly all of us would agree that someone is funny)4) All email forwards are annoying.
P2- true
structure- bad (the 1st premise only says some are funny; Sean could be one of the unfunny people)
overall- bad (bad structure)
Some email forwards are false.
Some annoying things are false.
P1- questionable ("annoying" is subjective)5) All bats are mammals.
P2- true
structure- good (the premises establish that some email forwards are both annoying and false; so some annoying things [those forwards] are false)
overall - bad (bad first premise)
All bats have wings.
All mammals have wings.
P1- true6) Some dads have beards.
P2- true (if interpreted to mean "All bats are the sorts of creatures who have wings.") or false (if interpreted to mean "Each and every living bat has wings," since some bats are born without wings)
structure- bad (we don't know enough about the relationship between mammals and winged creatures just from the fact that bats belong to each group)
overall- good (bad structure)
All bearded people are mean.
Some dads are mean.
P1- true7) This class is boring.
P2- questionable ("mean" is subjective)
structure- good (if all the people with beards were mean, then the dads with beards would be mean, so some dads would be mean)
overall- bad (bad 2nd premise)
All boring things are taught by Sean
This class is taught by Sean.
P1-questionable ("boring" is subjective)8) All students in here are mammals.
P2- false (it's reasonable to believe that there are some boring things not associated with Sean)
structure- good
overall- bad (bad premises)
All humans are mammals.
All students in here are humans.
P1- true
P2- true
structure- bad (the premises only tell us that students and humans both belong to the mammals group; we don't know enough about the relationship between students and humans from this; for instance, what if a dog were a student in our class?)
overall- bad (bad structure)
9) All hornets are wasps.
All wasps are insects.
All insects are scary.
All hornets are scary.
All humans are shorter than 10 feet tall.
All students in here are shorter than 10 feet tall.
Sean is singing right now.
Students are cringing right now.
Sean isn't singing right now.
Students aren't cringing right now.
Students aren't cringing right now.
Sean isn't singing right now.
Students are cringing right now.
Sean is singing right now.
All wasps are insects.
All insects are scary.
All hornets are scary.
P1- true!10) All students in here are humans.
P2- true
P3- questionable ("scary" is subjective)
structure- good (same structure as arg #1, just repeated once more)
overall- bad (bad 3rd premise)
All humans are shorter than 10 feet tall.
All students in here are shorter than 10 feet tall.
P1- true11) If Sean sings, then students cringe.
P2- true!
structure- good (same structure as arg #1)
overall- sound
Sean is singing right now.
Students are cringing right now.
P1- questionable (since you haven't heard me sing, you don't know whether it's true or false)12) If Sean sings, then students cringe.
P2- false
structure- good
overall- bad (bad premises)
Sean isn't singing right now.
Students aren't cringing right now.
P1- questionable (again, you don't know)13) If Sean sings, then students cringe.
P2- true
structure- bad (from premise 1, we only know what happens when Sean is singing, not when he isn't singing; students could cringe for a different reason)
overall- bad (bad 1st premise and structure)
Students aren't cringing right now.
Sean isn't singing right now.
P1- questionable (again, you don't know)14) If Sean sings, then students cringe.
P2- true
structure- good
overall- bad (bad 1st premise)
Students are cringing right now.
Sean is singing right now.
P1- questionable (again, you don't know)
P2- false
structure- bad (from premise 1, we only know that Sean singing is one way to guarantee that students cringe; just because they're cringing doesn't mean Sean's the one who caused it; again, students could cringe for a different reason)
overall- bad (bad premises and structure)
(More on Sisyphus)
Room Change
We're getting a bigger room! Yay!
Our new classroom is room 339 of the Fine Arts building. We'll be meeting in the new classroom tonight.
Hopefully, we won't be packed like this anymore:
Our new classroom is room 339 of the Fine Arts building. We'll be meeting in the new classroom tonight.
Hopefully, we won't be packed like this anymore:
Saturday, February 7, 2009
Join the Club!
So, I'm starting up a club -- the "Owning Our Ignorance" club -- devoted to fun and logic, in that order. I've put up a blog for it over here.
We're having our first meeting at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, February 11th, at Coffee Works in Voorhees. (I know that's a long way for y'all, but students from most of the schools I've taught at are planning to attend, so I'm trying to make it centrally located for them.)
Check it out! If you're interested, feel free to join us.
We're having our first meeting at 7:00 p.m. on Wednesday, February 11th, at Coffee Works in Voorhees. (I know that's a long way for y'all, but students from most of the schools I've taught at are planning to attend, so I'm trying to make it centrally located for them.)
Check it out! If you're interested, feel free to join us.
Thursday, February 5, 2009
3rd Week Readings
Here is a slightly better version of the Elliott Sober reading assignment:
Thanks to Tiffany for reminding me to post these! This version is a Word document. The document is ten pages long, but you only have to read the first six pages. It's not much easier to read than the photocopies I handed out in class, but it's a little better.
A copy of the Thomas Nagel reading assignment is also available online here. Both of these are the assigned reading to be read for our February 10th class.
Thanks to Tiffany for reminding me to post these! This version is a Word document. The document is ten pages long, but you only have to read the first six pages. It's not much easier to read than the photocopies I handed out in class, but it's a little better.
A copy of the Thomas Nagel reading assignment is also available online here. Both of these are the assigned reading to be read for our February 10th class.
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Defining Our Terms
1. Tool: Here's one Urban Dictionary definition of "tool," the one I had in mind when referring to Dane Cook:
2. Fugly: uh, rather ugly. Moe Szyslak has been called a few variations of this term.
3. Emo Kid: "Emo" has a ton of meanings. The wikipedia article on "emo" has a nice history of the term.
4. Lame: South Park usually nails this term.
Did I forget any terms? Let me know!
someone who tries too hard. a poser. one of those chic's who holds the sign saying "Carson Daly is Hot." the asstard who goes to a rock show because they heard one of the songs on the radio or mtv. or someone who insists on wearing velour sweat suits. Avril Lavigne.To find out more, I suggest watching Tool Academy to see our heroes in action:
2. Fugly: uh, rather ugly. Moe Szyslak has been called a few variations of this term.
3. Emo Kid: "Emo" has a ton of meanings. The wikipedia article on "emo" has a nice history of the term.
4. Lame: South Park usually nails this term.
Did I forget any terms? Let me know!
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